Willie Walker & The Butanes - Right Where I Belong (2004) [CD Rip]

  • 21 Nov, 22:15
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Artist:
Title: Right Where I Belong
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: One On One Records
Genre: Blues Soul
Quality: FLAC (tracks+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 58:49
Total Size: 452 MB | 172 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:
1. I Don't Mind At All (3:30)
2. (We Gotta) Put Out The Fire (4:15)
3. Careless (3:55)
4. No Longer For Me (4:01)
5. Right Where I Belong (4:06)
6. Give As Good As You Get (3:21)
7. Sometimes Love's Not Enough (4:10)
8. I Don't Know If I Can Make It Through (3:23)
9. Change (4:40)
10. Crying To Do (4:44)
11. I Understand (4:22)
12. Down For The Count (4:14)
13. Ain't It Funny (6:02)
14. I Feel It (3:59)

The #1 Blues CD on XM satellite radio's Bluesville channel February 5, 2005. Willie's 1st all new Soul recordings since his Goldwax/Checker 45s of the '60s. Backed by real horns, female backing vocals, guitar, Hammond organ, bass & drums of The Butanes.

The irony of the title is that Willie Walker is barely known here in his adopted hometown. It took a British label to unearth his collectible 1960s Memphis soul recordings, and another British label to release this new full-length, a return to sweet soul style. At a Cabooze show on May 8, Walker crooned for an audience that could well have been mostly family and old friends: Since relocating from Memphis in 1960, he has performed with the Royal Jubileers, the Val-Dons, Willie and the Bees, and Salt, Pepper & Spice. But it wasn't until 2002 that he cut an album of his own, a self-titled set of covers (on Haute), and it wasn't until this follow-up that he released one worthy of his powdery voice.

Right Where I Belong asks you to believe that a great Memphis soul singer has lived among us all along. Even the reissues don't prepare you for the sound. Where Walker's grit-free Sam Cooke impersonations on volumes one and two of The Goldwax Story (Ace Records) are confident and clarion, the older singer is a more vulnerable love man, with a tone that's sure but ravaged, and with hints of a lisp. Written entirely by Butanes guitarist Curtis Obeda, the 14 songs rehearse some clichés ("You picked me up when I was down, placed my feet on solid ground," etc.), and the horns don't have the greased ease of Virgil Nelson's accompanying Hammond. But Obeda's attentive arrangements are the perfect setting for a soul sage who doesn't showboat, and Walker makes every cliché feel true. ~Peter S. Scholtes


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